Here's Another Incredibly Brutal Chart For Republicans On The Fiscal Cliff

A new poll from the Pew Research Center provides another warning sign for the Republican Party and what appears to be a serious post-election image problem. It is a particularly brutal survey on both the party's overall favorability and its handling of the negotiations to avert the so-called fiscal cliff.

That might not even be the most glaring problem. Here's a look at some especially bad signs for Republicans:

Obama's approval rating has risen 12 points since August 2011. The approval rating of Republicans in Congress sits at 25 percent, hovering around the 22-percent level it fell to in the wake of the debt ceiling crisis.

The Republican Party's favorable-to-unfavorable split is 36-59. The Democratic Party's is 48-47.

Only 46 percent of Republican voters approve of Republican leaders in Congress. By comparison, 71 percent of Democrats approve of their party's leaders in Congress.

House Speaker John Boehner's favorable-to-unfavorable split sits at 21-40.

More people think Democrats can "do a better job" handling jobs, the economy, Medicare, health care, Social Security and education.

By a 53-33 margin, more Americans think the GOP is "more extreme in its positions."

By a 69-28 margin, Americans support raising tax rates on incomes above $250,000. The only significant spending cuts that voters favor are reductions in Medicare and Social Security benefits to upper-income Americans.